Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 72A— - CREATING HELPFUL INCENTIVES TO PRODUCE SEMICONDUCTORS FOR AMERICA › § 4653
If funds are available, the Secretary of Defense must set up a public-private partnership, with help from Commerce, Energy, Homeland Security, and the Director of National Intelligence, to encourage companies to form one or more consortia that will develop and produce measurably secure microelectronics (like chips, memory, packaging, and testing) for the Defense Department, intelligence community, critical infrastructure, and other national security uses. The program can use grants and other incentives to help build or upgrade U.S. manufacturing and R&D facilities. Consortium members must be able to design, make, assemble, package, or test microelectronics that the National Security Advisor and the Secretary of Defense call critical. Members can be fabless firms, buyers, or co‑investors. They must manage supply‑chain security risks and meet the applicable secure supply‑chain standards. The Secretary of Defense and the Director of National Intelligence will pick participants, looking at past participation in relevant programs, work for the Defense or intelligence communities, security approvals, and ongoing checks for foreign ownership or influence. Agreements can be contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, commercial deals, or other special arrangements. The work should be led by the offices in charge of research/engineering and acquisition/sustainment and may cover radio‑frequency, mixed‑signal, radiation‑tolerant, and hardened microelectronics. The Secretary must make a plan to keep trusted production for current and legacy defense systems and critical infrastructure. The Secretary must give Congress a plan within 90 days after January 1, 2021. The Comptroller General must report one year after that plan and then at least every two years for 10 years. The Secretary must also work with the National Academies on a study and deliver it by October 1, 2022. If funds are available, the Secretary must also create a national microelectronics R&D network to move lab inventions into fabrication and to keep U.S. leadership. The network will let companies test new materials, devices, and designs cheaply in U.S. facilities to protect intellectual property, speed new tech to domestic manufacturers, and do other needed work. The Secretary will select at least two entities by competition and, when possible, choose participants that together represent different U.S. regions.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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15 U.S.C. § 4653
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73